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The Toronto Blue Jays were 20 days away from winning their first World Series. Bill Clinton was running for President.

And Canada had just lost its professional soccer league. When the Winnipeg Fury finished off their upset of the Vancouver 86ers on Oct 4, 1992, that was that. The dreams of the 1986 generation were dead and the dreams of the next were dead on arrival.

Although the game lived on at the D2 level and, eventually, MLS came to fill a tiny part of the void.

In exactly one month the long, hopeless, depressing walk in the woods will end. When Forge FC kicks-off against York 9 we can finally stop talking about what we don’t have and instead focus on what we might become.

In honour of the final 30 days without a pro soccer league here are the top 30 things I hope to see in CanPL over the next 5 years.

In 2019

30. A wonder goal makes the sports packages.

I don’t care who or what team, but in a year where building recognition is the most important thing I hope to see a goal or play crossover into the mainstream.

29. Someone dislikes someone

Sports aren’t fun without conflict. The league will arrive the day there’s some true anger and rivalry

28. I’m (or other neutral reporter) is accused of bias

I don’t have a horse in the race, but I look forward to being accused of it. That will mean fans are being irrational and fans should be irrational.

27. Barrett’s Privateers is sung in Halifax

I mean, come on.

26. The Fury get humbled

Sorry, Ottawa fans but the Fury represent every negative person out there who tells us its silly to care about this league. It would be great to put a few goals past them in the V-Cup.

25. Fury and CanPL make up

…and then see the two groups make up for the good of the sport

24. A mostly CanPL u23 team excels at Olympic Qualifying

Now, wouldn’t that be nice…

In 2020

23. The Fury join the fold

And all is forgiven

22. Quebec gets in

The league needs to be in French Canada and, especially, Quebec. Adding Ottawa and Montreal would be huge

21. A coaching change happens

I don’t wish to cheer for someone to lose their job, but the first coaching change that happens will be a sign of a healthy league – winning should matter.

20. Lower Mainland in

Three expansion teams might seem like a lot, but they brought seven in this year. Having a presence in all three major metros is important

19. A young player leaves for MLS

Establishing the league as a natural part of the player pathway is vital. It would be a huge success if a young player is poached by MLS in just the second year.

18. A V-Cup upset

One of TFC, VWFC or IMFC gets embarrassed in one leg of a series. It’s a bit early to hope for more, but that would be a great day for the league.

In 2021

17. CanWPL announced

Planning to start a women’s league begins in earnest

16. Full D3 coverage

The League1 Ontario concept is extended to all 10 provinces, with a national D3 championship determined

15. A rival for Winnipeg

One of Regina or Saskatoon joins to bring the league to 11

14. A rival for Halifax

One of Moncton or Quebec joins to bring the league to 12

13. Al-Classico featured in some cheesy ultras profile

It shouldn’t matter, but we’re lying if we don’t admit that we want the rest of the world to notice

12. WE QUALIFY TO QATAR!!!!!

Not fully CanPL related, but let’s allow ourselves to dream a little

In 2022

11. Kitchener-Waterloo joins

As one part of a SW Ontario expansion that hits the biggest population area still without a team

10. With London

And the 519 derby is born (just don’t call it that)

9. The women get a cup

Using the D3 teams along with a few CanPL senior women’s teams that are up and running the first women’s Voyageurs Cup is held

8. A player is sold to a Big 5 league team

This is what it is all about

7. Qatar

We score a goal and compete with honor. There are players on the roster that played in CanPL

6. CCL Fever

A Can PL wins the qualifying tournament and gets a shot at the region’s big boys

In 2023

5. Coast-to-coast

Welcome St. John’s!

4. The first 16 round out

The 16th team joins – lets say Mississauga or Scarborough to round-out the GTA

3. First evidence the league is part of our culture

“16-year-old Dave Smith said ‘I always dreamed of playing for Forge. My dad used to take me to the games.”